URL: http://l1.publication-archive.com/public?fn=enter&repository=1&article=4Written language skills are dynamic, they develop differently in individuals and are acquired in multiple ways and contexts. Paradoxically, mainstream research on and teaching of these skills is based on a linguistic philosophy that has always valued highly systematic – and static – descriptions. The problem of static perspectives is that they describe only a proficiency related to structures at a given point in time, without any flexible model of reading and writing behaviour. In the present article I claim the socalled 'alphabetical principle' to be an unfortunate product of static perspectives, and which has a very limited relevance when we want to seize the ...
We are arguing that elaborated orientations, and even more elaborated codes are the media for thinki...
In this talk I will argue that our notion of linguistic competence needs to be revisited. Static de...
In this article it is argued that language can be seen as a dynamic system, i.e. a set of variables ...
URL: http://l1.publication-archive.com/public?fn=enter&repository=1&article=4Written language skills...
Written language skills are dynamic, they develop differently in individuals and are acquired in mul...
URL: http://l1.publication-archive.com/public?fn=enter&repository=1&article=20In mainstream theory a...
Mainstream research on reading and writing is based on the assumption, common in modern linguistics,...
Passive and dynamic views of language learning Since language is species-specific, clearly there is ...
Chomsky (1965, 1986) presents a series of arguments for an innate syntactic component of the languag...
Chomsky (1965, 1986) presents a series of arguments for an innate syntactic component of the languag...
In mainstream theory about written language skills there is a strong relation between the notion of ...
Abstract: Research on written language skills is continuously having to deal with assumptions about ...
Language acquisition research experienced a boom following the Chomskyian revolution. The focus of a...
Language acquisition research experienced a boom following the Chomskyian revolution. The focus of a...
The main question that this book tries to find answers to is what it is that makes language learnabl...
We are arguing that elaborated orientations, and even more elaborated codes are the media for thinki...
In this talk I will argue that our notion of linguistic competence needs to be revisited. Static de...
In this article it is argued that language can be seen as a dynamic system, i.e. a set of variables ...
URL: http://l1.publication-archive.com/public?fn=enter&repository=1&article=4Written language skills...
Written language skills are dynamic, they develop differently in individuals and are acquired in mul...
URL: http://l1.publication-archive.com/public?fn=enter&repository=1&article=20In mainstream theory a...
Mainstream research on reading and writing is based on the assumption, common in modern linguistics,...
Passive and dynamic views of language learning Since language is species-specific, clearly there is ...
Chomsky (1965, 1986) presents a series of arguments for an innate syntactic component of the languag...
Chomsky (1965, 1986) presents a series of arguments for an innate syntactic component of the languag...
In mainstream theory about written language skills there is a strong relation between the notion of ...
Abstract: Research on written language skills is continuously having to deal with assumptions about ...
Language acquisition research experienced a boom following the Chomskyian revolution. The focus of a...
Language acquisition research experienced a boom following the Chomskyian revolution. The focus of a...
The main question that this book tries to find answers to is what it is that makes language learnabl...
We are arguing that elaborated orientations, and even more elaborated codes are the media for thinki...
In this talk I will argue that our notion of linguistic competence needs to be revisited. Static de...
In this article it is argued that language can be seen as a dynamic system, i.e. a set of variables ...